How to calculate the Doppler Shift Frequency

AI Thread Summary
To calculate the Doppler shifted frequency received from a spaceship traveling at 85% the speed of light, the formula used is f_o = f_s √((1+v)/(1-v)), where f_o is the observed frequency, f_s is the source frequency, and v is the speed as a fraction of the speed of light. For a spacecraft transmitting at 100 MHz, with v set to -0.85, the received frequency can be determined using this equation. The discussion also touches on the effects of time dilation and blue shift when traveling at 99% the speed of light towards stars, prompting curiosity about the observable changes in frequency. Participants express appreciation for the clarity of the formula and its practical application in calculations. Understanding these concepts is crucial for grasping relativistic effects in astrophysics.
mpolo
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I would like to know the formula for calculating the Doppler shifted frequency received by someone on Earth that is received from a spaceship traveling at 85 percent the speed of light away from Earth. Please show example of the formula being used. Let's say the spacecraft sent a radio signal from the ship at 100 MHZ what would the received frequency of that signal be on earth?
 
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Have you tried googling for "relativistic Doppler shift"?
 
PeroK said:
Have you tried googling for "relativistic Doppler shift"?
Yes I have looked but I would like to see someone actually do it with real numbers and a bit of explanation I am curious as to how the time dilation works in the scheme of things. In other words what would it look like if I were in a spaceship traveling at 99% the speed of light towards a group of stars. Would the light of the stars be blue shifted? If so, by how much?
 
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mpolo said:
Yes I have looked but I would like to see someone actually do it with real numbers and a bit of explanation I am curious as to how the time dilation works in the scheme of things. In other words what would it look like if I were in a spaceship traveling at 99% the speed of light towards a group of stars. Would the light of the stars be blue shifted? If so, by how much?

The equation is:

##f_o = f_s \sqrt{\frac{1+v}{1-v}}##

Where ##f_o=## is the observed frequency, ##f_s## the frequency of the source and ##v## is the speed expressed as a fraction of the speed of light. E.g. ##v = -0.85## or ##v = 0.99## in the two examples you wanted. If ##v## is positive then motion of the source is towards the observer and if ##v## is negative then motion of the source is away from the observer.

You could put that formula into a calculator or spreadsheet and plug away!
 
Oh Man, Thanks this is perfect thanks so much! This is exactly what I was looking for! Going to have fun putting this is to a program and trying different values.
 
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